Chuck Durham looks at the plaque honoring him, following Thursday’s ceremony. |
On a crisp November Thursday, a standing-room only crowd filled the 319-seat auditorium to celebrate the dedication of the Durham Research Center and pay tribute to the generous philanthropists who made the building a reality.
“This Citadel for research will create an environment that will allow those who occupy it to make advances in the health sciences and add incrementally to the benefit of society,” said University of Nebraska Foundation President Terry Fairfield. “This investment of individuals has enabled us to have a future that’s exciting and boundless.”
Mike Yanney, one of the principal donors for the Durham Research Center, greets Alumni Affairs Director Jackie Johnston before making a purchase of DRC T-shirts. |
“Research is the best investment you can make,” said Charles Durham, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Durham Resources, after unveiling a plaque in his honor. The plaque, which will hang in the Durham Research Center atrium, reads: “Charles W. Durham: Champion of medical research to prevent, cure, give hope and advance the common good.”
Durham’s gift – the largest in UNMC history – led the fund-raising effort for the $77 million building, which was built almost exclusively with private funds. Of the research center’s cost, Nebraska’s Congressional delegation secured $2.5 million in federal funds for the project. The private sector provided gifts for the rest of the cost; no state funds were involved. Durham’s contribution is not being made public at his request.
From left to right: Terry Fairfield, Chuck Durham, Walter Scott, Randy Ferlic, M.D., and Roger Bulger, M.D., in the background. |
The Durham Research Center will further put Nebraska on the map, said Roger Bulger, M.D., president of the Association of Academic Health Centers. “Whether it’s on bioterrorism or public health infrastructure creative clinical arrangements or educational innovations or global health I find the University of Nebraska is there with a model…Their name is out there.”
Buildings such as the Durham Research Center, he said, explain a Research America survey that says 85 percent to 90 percent of Americans want more invested in research. “Now that’s powerful,” Dr. Bulger said. “It says something about the staying power of this building.”
Scientists Michele Fontaine, left, and Laurey Steinke, Ph.D., in the Durham Research Center’s protein structure core facility. |
During the hour-long dedication, a number of dignitaries shared their thoughts on UNMC’s newest building. “It’s a crown jewel and a powerful recruiting tool,” said University of Nebraska President L. Dennis Smith, Ph.D., who began his career as a biological sciences researcher. “It will enable us to recruit the best new faculty and elevate current faculty to superstar status.”
Similar to Durham, businessman Walter Scott said he invests in projects that benefit the future, that showcase excellence and that attract new minds and retain the best and brightest.
Harold M. Maurer, M.D., Chuck Durham and Roger Bulger, M.D. |
The crowd smiled when U.S. Sen. Chuck Hagel remarked: “(This shows) the world that the community of Nebraska is far more than just the center of the universe.”
Lt. Gov. Dave Heineman summed up his remarks in the form of a researcher’s mathematical equation saying: “The world-class vision of Chancellor Hal Maurer plus the world-class vision of the medical center staff, the world-class leadership of Walter Scott, Ken Stinson, Mike Yanney and others, plus the world-class generosity of Chuck Durham, equals the world-class University of Nebraska Medical Center.”
Mayor Mike Fahey called the Durham Research Center a “shining star for Omaha,” which would carve a strategic niche for future economic growth and help revitalize Omaha’s central neighborhoods.
Members of Hawkins Construction Co., contractor for the project. |
The Durham Research Center is 289,000 gross square feet, and towers over the western edge of UNMC. The research center features 116 research laboratories, a 319-seat auditorium, three classrooms and 12 conference/seminar rooms. About 55 of UNMC’s top researchers, accounting for nearly $55 million in extramural support, will move to the building. About 25 percent of the building’s space is being left open for research expansion and the recruitment of new, top-level researchers.
Chuck Durham and Walter Scott. |
“Chuck has helped propel UNMC forward,” Dr. Maurer said. “We’re eternally grateful to this true champion.”